Iranian Missiles

"Landep News"
U.S. Army Advises Israel Not To Attack Iran Yet
Iranian Missiles
The United States on Sunday advised Israel to hold its plan to strike the Iranian nuclear sites and offer international sanctions more time to work. The advise was delivered by United States Army chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Martin Dempsey, who said that the United States believes that Iran has not decided yet whether to “weaponize” the nuclear capability it has.
Dempsey said that it was due to this uncertainty that the Israeli allies should not rush into deciding that time has come for an airstrike against Iran, which would entail reprisals and the escalation of tension in the region.
Another reason for the US army to advise against the military attack is the doubt that Israel has the military capacity to permanently cripple the Iranian nuclear capacity, scattered all across the country in different sites, some of them buried deep inside mountains.
Israel, Dempsey said, has the capacity to cripple Iranian nuclear capacity and delay its activity for a couple of years, but to reach them all is hard to believe that they can. Same concerns were expressed by the British officials.
The American general also specified that he was perfectly aware that for Israel the Iranian nuclear program poses an existential threat, in the sense that it threatens to destroy Israel as a state.
The caution of the Western nation is interpreted by some factions of the Israeli society as an evidence that the West is not committed to protecting Israel against the Iranian threat. Thus, Israel Today Magazine complains that the radar installed in Turkey would not offer Israel an early warning about the Iranian missile launch.
The news is said to have been shared by the NATO secretary general, who said that the radar was a system that would protect the NATO populations, and that the data obtained “would not be shared with third countries.” A Turkish official is said by the magazine to have singled out Israel as one of the third countries.
Israel Today is also preoccupied with the reopening of negotiations between Iran and the European and American counterparts, saying that while Hillary Clinton and Catherine Ashton are hoping that the negotiations would lead to the solution of the Iranian nuclear file, Israeli intelligence shows that Iran could produce a nuclear bomb in less than a year.
Officials from the International Atomic Energy Agency traveled to Iranian capital Tehran to meet with the officials in this country in a bid to defused the situation and prove that the Iranian program can be kept under scrutiny without any military effort.
The visit comes a week after the Iranian president introduced the first Iranian domestic-made fuel rod into the core of a reactor, showing that the nuclear program has attained a high level of self-sufficiency and that the Iranians can produce all the components without being forced to acquire them.
The meeting in Tehran comes after Iran sent a letter to the European Union and the United States in which it said it wanted the negotiations on the nuclear program resumed as soon as possible, a bid which made Clinton and Ashton to consider the possibility of more serious results this time.
The delegation of the IAEA is going to seek access to the uranium mines and the nuclear plants where the regime is having its centrifuges that enrich uranium. Previous such visits ended in inconclusive results because the regime has concealed data from them.
However, last year the IAEA published a report that was showing that Iran was simulating on the computers the nuclear weapons. The report prompted a very quick reaction from Israel, which announced its readiness to strike Iranian nuclear plants before winter.
The United States opposed, and since their attack could not be accomplished without American support, the strike was postponed until the next window of opportunity. Until then, the Americans hope to avert it by means on international sanctions.
U.S.A. has imposed sanctions against the central bank of Iran in hopes that it would cripple its economy. The European Union has imposed an embargo on oil, which is expected to become operational in July.
Iran responded with the threat to close the Strait of Hormuz, through which a fourth of the world’s oil flows, and has preemptively terminated the contracts with six European states which backed the embargo idea.
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